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  • Rumsfeld's retirement includes summers in Montana

    GERARD O'BRIEN, The Montana Standard

    TWIN BRIDGES (AP) — As the 10th anniversary of the al-Qaida attacks on the United States approaches, the man who crafted America's military response in both Iraq and Afghanistan believes that the terrorism threat will continue to evolve — and the country's defense systems must remain well funded to be vigilant. Donald Rumsfeld, secretary of defense for presidents George W. Bush and Gerald Ford, is retired and spends a portion of his summers on a gentleman's ranch along the Big Hole River in southwest Montana. His 40-...

  • Group: Montana tuition high compared with salaries

    Tristan

    MISSOULA (AP) — An education group says Montana families spend a higher percentage of their household income sending their children to public, in-state colleges and universities than families in other Western states. The Western Interstate Commission for Higher Education reports that tuition and fees to attend a two-year college in Montana costs 8.1 percent of a family's median household income, compared with a regional average of 5.9 percent. At the state's four-year universities, excluding the University of Montana and M...

  • Montana copper mining heiress dies in NY at 104

    VERENA DOBNIK, The Associated Press

    NEW YORK — Huguette Clark, a 104-year-old heiress to a Montana copper fortune who once lived in the largest apartment on New York City's Fifth Avenue, died Tuesday at a Manhattan hospital, but prosecutors are still pursuing a legal battle over her money and care. The reclusive Clark spent the last two decades of her life in New York City hospitals. "Miss Clark's passing is a sad event for all those who have loved and respected her over the years," her attorney, Wallace Bock, said in a statement. "She died as she wanted, w...

  • States may get second chance at insurance exchange

    Matt Gouras

    HELENA — The Obama administration says states that have not adopted their own insurance exchanges may get a second chance to avoid one run by the U.S. government. Only 11 states have fully embraced the idea of taking federal money to set up their own state-run insurance exchange, a key part of Obama's health care overhaul designed to help uninsured people buy coverage from a choice of plans with federal tax credits. But states that have been slow to accept the idea, or outright rejected it in resistance to the law, will h...

  • 3 Montana wolves killed for attacking livestock

    The Associated Press

    BUTTE — A Montana wildlife official says a federal trapper has shot and killed three wolves from the Table Mountain pack near Silver Star in southwestern Montana blamed for killing a calf on a ranch earlier in May. Pat Flowers of the Montana Department of Fish, Wildlife and Parks tells The Montana Standard that the wolves were killed Tuesday on private land. Flowers says one of the wolves was an adult fitted with a radio collar after a previous attack on livestock. Flowers says the pack is still viable though it's unclear h...

  • Judge approves settlement over Indian royalties

    MATT DALY, Associated Press

    WASHINGTON (AP) — A federal judge has approved a $3.4 billion settlement over mismanaged Indian royalties that represents the largest claim ever made against the U.S. government. The plaintiffs, including Elouise Cobell of Montana, claimed in the 15-year-old suit that the individual accounts of hundreds of thousands of Indians were mismanaged by the government for more than a century, costing them billions of dollars in oil, timber and other royalties. The two sides settled in 2009 after years of court battles. Congress a...

  • Schweitzer tells land managers issues remain

    Matt Gouras

    HELENA — Montana Gov. Brian Schweitzer is unhappy with federal land managers over a land conservation proposal he says was bungled. The governor met Monday with federal officials from several agencies who were pitching the America's Great Outdoors Initiative. Schweitzer said he is interested in the conservation plan. But he's skeptical about its success, given other lingering land management problems. Schweitzer said he wants Yellowstone National Park to allow bison hunting. He also wants land managers to seriously look at h...

  • Fatal horse virus reported in West, Canada

    REBECCA BOONE, Associated Press

    BOISE, Idaho — Horse owners and organizations nationwide are watching anxiously and some are shutting down shows and other events in an effort to keep a deadly horse virus outbreak that began in Utah from spreading beyond a handful of Western states and Canada. So far, at least 17 horses in Idaho, Utah, Colorado, California, Washington and Canada have been infected with the highly contagious Equine Herpes Virus-1, and at least three have died. The disease poses no threat to people but is easily spread among horses, alpacas a...

  • Anaconda man charged after 2 dogs maul 5 cats

    The Associated Press

    ANACONDA — A 59-year-old Anaconda man faces trial this fall on charges that he allowed his pit bull-cross dogs to run loose, enter another house and kill five cats. The Montana Standard reports John Griswold made an initial court appearance on May 11 and pleaded not guilty to two counts of owning nuisance animals and two counts of letting his dogs run at large. Trial is set for Sept. 10. Court records say Griswold's dogs jumped into a fenced yard, got into a house through a pet door and attacked five cats on April 7. Four w...

  • NY Sen. Schumer: Radar coming to northern border

    The Associated Press

    BUFFALO, N.Y. — Sen. Charles Schumer says Homeland Security will begin tapping into Canadian military radar later this year to detect low-flying aircraft used to smuggle drugs from Canada into the United States. The New York Democrat chaired a hearing of the subcommittee on Immigration, Refugees and Border Security in Washington Tuesday. Afterward, he told reporters that the Department of Homeland Security will begin integrating the Canadian radar feeds by November. The technology was used with success in Washington state f...

  • Legislators ask pipeline officials about reforms

    Tristan

    WASHINGTON (AP) — Legislators questioned federal officials about their plans to tighten the country's pipeline safety rules in the wake of the Exxon Mobil spill in Montana, asking whether the lead safety agency had been overly cozy with the energy industry. The head of the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration told the congressional hearing Friday that the agency's highest concern is public safety. Administrator Cynthia Quarterman is seeking greater authority to oversee the nation's energy pipelines. She s...

  • East Helena woman aims to decriminalize marijuana

    Tristan

    HELENA (AP) — ?An East Helena woman is trying to put a constitutional initiative to the voters to decriminalize marijuana so that it is regulated like alcohol. Lee Newspapers State Bureau reports that Barb Trego filed the paperwork this week with Secretary of State Linda McCulloch Trego is a 56-year-old medical marijuana patient and former Lewis and Clark Sheriff's Office employee. State agencies must review the proposal before the petition language is approved and she can start collecting signatures. To qualify for the b...

  • 6 local governments sue Schweitzer over vetoes

    Tristan

    HELENA (AP) — Six local governments have filed a lawsuit against Gov. Brian Schweitzer over his line-item vetoes of money for their local bridge and water projects, which the governor said were done either because lawmakers did not support the spending or a lack of need. Carbon, Fergus, Madison and Sweet Grass counties, the city of Roundup and the town of Sheridan filed the lawsuit in District Court in Helena last week. They also named Commerce Director Dore Schwinden and the state of Montana, according to the Lee N...

  • Judge throws out lawsuit over Custer museum raids

    Matthew Brown

    BILLINGS — A federal judge threw out a lawsuit claiming federal agents illegally raided Montana's Custer Battlefield Museum during an investigation into the alleged sale of fraudulent artifacts and eagle feathers. The judgment was filed in U.S. District Court in favor of two dozen federal agents who participated in the raids in 2005 and 2008. Judge Richard Cebull dismissed as frivolous claims by museum director Christopher Kortlander that the raids were illegal and the agents had violated his constitutional rights. The i...

  • GOP bills would block new monuments on public land

    MATTHEW DALY, Associated Press

    WASHINGTON (AP) — Presidents from Theodore Roosevelt to George W. Bush have designated public land as national monuments, using a federal law to protect from development sites judged to have natural, historical or scientific significance. Now some House Republicans, saying the 105-year-old law has been misused, have introduced bills to limit or block the president's ability to make such designations without approval from Congress. GOP Rep. Denny Rehberg of Montana compared the 1906 Antiquities Act to the mythical sword of Dam...

  • Scope of pipeline spill holds despite more sites

    Matthew Brown

    BILLINGS — More oil-fouled locations were discovered along the Yellowstone River as floodwaters receded after an Exxon Mobil Corp. pipeline failure, but officials said Monday the geographical extent of pollution along the scenic waterway did not appear to be growing. A total of 45 locations with oil had been found, an increase of 15 sites since Saturday, said Steve Merritt of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. The number is likely to keep increasing as crews in boats reach areas that previously were inaccessible b...

  • Wildlife assessment from oil spill could be weeks

    Tristan

    BILLINGS (AP) — It may be two or three weeks before Montana officials can safely launch boats on the Yellowstone River to determine the extent of damage to wildlife from the July 1 oil spill, officials said. The river near is running high from late snowpack melt, making it difficult to accurately assess the effects of an estimated 1,000 barrels of oil that spilled into the river after and Exxon Mobil Corp. pipeline failed near Laurel. "We haven't seen 99 percent of the riverbank yet," Bob Gibson, a spokesman for Fish, Wildlif...

  • Restaurant sues over 'Carcass Removal' listing

    Matt Volz

    HELENA — A Bozeman restaurant listed in the phone book under "Animal Carcass Removal" became the butt of a Jay Leno joke earlier this year, but it's no laughing matter to the owner now suing the publishing company over the business he's lost. Hunter Lacey says in his lawsuit that business at his Bar 3 Bar-B-Q restaurants in Bozeman and nearby Belgrade has dropped off since the Dex Media Inc. listing and that his brand and reputation have gone down the tubes. The listing first appeared in 2009 in the yellow pages of Dex's t...

  • Suspect in triple slaying on Crow Reservation arrested

    Matthew Brown

    LODGE GRASS — A 22-year-old man suspected of killing his elderly grandmother and two others on Montana's Crow Reservation was arrested Wednesday night in Washington state after a daylong search, the FBI said. Sheldon Bernard Chase was arrested without incident in Spokane, Wash. He is suspected of using a rifle around noon Tuesday to kill his grandmother, Gloria Sarah Goes Ahead Cummins, 80; his cousin, 21-year-old Levon Driftwood; and her boyfriend, 20-year-old Rueben Jefferson. AP Photo/The Billings Gazette, James W...

  • Search on for man who shot 3 on Crow Reservation

    Matthew Brown

    BILLINGS — The search for an armed suspect in a triple shooting on the Crow Reservation spanned the southeast Montana countryside Wednesday as people were warned to stay inside for their safety. Authorities were seeking Sheldon Bernard Chase, 22, in the deaths of a his grandmother and a young couple at a rural residence about 10 miles outside of Lodge Grass, a town of about 500 people near the Wyoming border. AP Photo/The Billings Gazette, James Woodcock Law enforcement officers remove a shooting victim's body from a home a...

  • Wyoming residents help Montana flood victims

    GIB MATHERS. TESSA SCHWEIGERT - Powell Tribune

    POWELL, Wyo. — Hearing about devastation across the border has prompted northern Wyoming residents to help Montanans struggling with flood conditions. Flooding in Montana has damaged at least 200 homes on the Crow Indian Reservation and many more homes and businesses in other areas. Water levels had dropped in the central Montana town of Roundup this past week, but warmer weather is expected to cause a new round of flooding in parts of the state as mountain snows melt. Photo/The Billings Gazette, David Grubbs Vernelle M...

  • Montana issuing marijuana cards under new law

    STEPHEN DOCKERY, Associated Press

    HELENA — Montana health officials have begun issuing new medical marijuana cards as part of the state's overhaul of its marijuana industry. The new law granted the Department of Public Health and Human Services powers on Wednesday to write temporary rules to issue the cards. Agency spokesman Jon Ebelt said the department has processed about 500 applications so far. The new card rules involve a more restrictive system of forms and procedures for patients and growers to register with the state. There are several new a...

  • Bus drivers accused of DUI during field trip

    The Associated Press

    BOZEMAN — Two charter bus drivers have been arrested for allegedly taking a group of Bozeman seventh-graders on a field trip to Yellowstone National Park while under the influence of alcohol. KBZK-TV reports schools Superintendent Kirk Miller has written a letter to parents of the Sacajawea Middle School students saying the park received a call Friday morning from a person unrelated to the trip who was concerned the bus drivers might be impaired. Miller says that while the students were exploring the park, rangers "...

  • Wolf hunts get under way in Montana, Idaho

    Matthew Brown

    BILLINGS — Gray wolf hunts are under way in Montana and Idaho as state officials seek to sharply reduce the predator's numbers in hopes of curbing attacks on livestock and big game herds. Montana's hunt kicked off at sunrise Saturday with a six-week, archery-only wolf season. A general wolf hunting season opens Oct. 22 and runs through the end of the year. Montana wildlife officials have set a statewide harvest quota of 220 wolves, which would reduce the state's population to a projected 425 animals. Idaho's hunt began T...

  • MSU report: Professor, student had relationship

    Tristan

    BOZEMAN — A Montana State University investigation has found an assistant music professor at the school had a relationship with a female student and violated policies against sexual harassment and gender discrimination, a newspaper is reporting. The Bozeman Daily Chronicle reports 47-year-old MSU Orchestra conductor Shuichi Komiyama denies the allegations. The newspaper received a copy of an 18-page report from the university's investigation into claims against Komiyama from the student's attorney earlier this week. MSU l...

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